Close X
Thursday, November 14, 2024
ADVT 
National

Eminent Canadians To Advise Justin Trudeau On Merit Based Appointments To Senate

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 19 Jan, 2016 12:02 PM
    OTTAWA — The federal government has tapped eminent Canadians from academe, the civil service, medicine, law, arts and sports to advise Prime Minister Justin Trudeau on merit-based appointments to the maligned Senate.
     
    The independent advisory board on Senate appointments will be chaired by Huguette Labelle, a former deputy minister in various federal departments and former chancellor of the University of Ottawa.
     
    She'll be joined by two other permanent members: McGill University dean of law Daniel Jutras and former University of Alberta president Indira Samarasekera.
     
    The board is to recommend a short list of five nominees for each vacancy in the upper house, of which there are currently 22.
     
    The government has also named two ad hoc members from each of the three provinces — Ontario, Quebec and Manitoba — whose vacant Senate seats are to be filled first.
     
    Trudeau intends to name a government leader in the Senate from among the first five appointees, whom the government hopes to have in place by the end of February.
     
    Ontario's ad hoc members are former provincial senior public servant Murray Segal and Dawn Lavell Harvard, president of the Native Women's Association of Canada; Quebec's are Yves Lamontagne, president of the province's college of physicians, and one-time Olympic diving gold medallist Sylvie Bernier; Manitoba's are singer-songwriter Heather Bishop and Susan Lewis, former president of the United Way of Winnipeg.
     
    Provincial governments were invited to recommend names to fill the ad hoc positions but while Ontario and Quebec participated, insiders say Manitoba's NDP government, which supports abolition of the Senate, did not.
     
    The advisory board is the first step towards delivering on Trudeau's promise to return the scandal-plagued Senate to its intended role as an independent chamber of sober second thought.
     
    Democratic Institutions Minister Maryam Monsef said the calibre of people named to the advisory board is indicative the kind of people Trudeau wants to populate the Senate.
     
    "I believe we're on the right track in ensuring that ... senators are there because of merit and that they will help tone down the partisanship that has hampered the effectiveness of the Senate in the recent past," she said following a cabinet retreat in St. Andrews, N.B.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Wounded Oct. 22 Officer Tells His Story As 20 Honoured For Bravery

    Wounded Oct. 22 Officer Tells His Story As 20 Honoured For Bravery
    Const. Samearn Son was one of 20 parliamentary security officers and Mounties honoured Monday at RCMP headquarters for their bravery on Oct. 22 of last year.

    Wounded Oct. 22 Officer Tells His Story As 20 Honoured For Bravery

    Apparent Provincial Climate Unity Gives Trudeau Tailwind En Route To Paris

    Apparent Provincial Climate Unity Gives Trudeau Tailwind En Route To Paris
    A meeting of Canada's first ministers Monday in Ottawa — the first in almost seven years — ended with 11 provinces and territories humming from the same environmental hymn book as Trudeau's newly elected Liberals.

    Apparent Provincial Climate Unity Gives Trudeau Tailwind En Route To Paris

    Syrian Refugee Plan Milestone For One Man, New Beginning For Thousands Of Others

    Almost exactly three years ago, Faisal Alazem appeared before a House of Commons committee and urged Canada to do more to help the millions of Syrians caught up in that country's brutal civil war.

    Syrian Refugee Plan Milestone For One Man, New Beginning For Thousands Of Others

    Rachel Notley Vows Tight Controls On $3Billion Carbon Tax To Ensure Only For Green Projects

    Rachel Notley Vows Tight Controls On $3Billion Carbon Tax To Ensure Only For Green Projects
    Notley says none of the money is to go to broader or unrelated expenditures such as paying down the deficit and debt.

    Rachel Notley Vows Tight Controls On $3Billion Carbon Tax To Ensure Only For Green Projects

    Canada Is Back: Rocker Neil Young Supports Alberta's Carbon Tax, Pleased By Liberal Government

    "I'm very happy," said the 70-year-old Canadian who has lived in California for years.

    Canada Is Back: Rocker Neil Young Supports Alberta's Carbon Tax, Pleased By Liberal Government

    B.C. Green To Seek Party Leadership As Federal Green Leader Attends Announcement

    Oak Bay-Gordon Head MLA Andrew Weaver will announce his candidacy Tuesday at the University of Victoria, where he will follow his leadership announcement with a speech.

    B.C. Green To Seek Party Leadership As Federal Green Leader Attends Announcement